I've often wondered just how much the JTR investigation was damaged by there being two separate forces involved.
Was the relationship between Metropolitan and City police, generally speaking, co-operative, copmpetitive, mutually ditrustful, or what? And would the answer be the same at grass-roots and command levels?
Apart from the obvious relevance to the night of the double event, I wonder how far say a Met. officer would be constrained by jurisdictional considerations if conducting enquiries in City territory. A retired policeman I know assures me that an officer has no authority over a junior officer from a different force. Was this the case back in 1888?
I have read that in the US, the involvement of several different law enforcement agencies can seriously hinder the detection and capture of offenders. If such was the case in Victorian London, did Jack use it to his advantage or was he just lucky? Or are we making way too much of the whole Met. v. City angle?
Best wishes,
Steve.
Was the relationship between Metropolitan and City police, generally speaking, co-operative, copmpetitive, mutually ditrustful, or what? And would the answer be the same at grass-roots and command levels?
Apart from the obvious relevance to the night of the double event, I wonder how far say a Met. officer would be constrained by jurisdictional considerations if conducting enquiries in City territory. A retired policeman I know assures me that an officer has no authority over a junior officer from a different force. Was this the case back in 1888?
I have read that in the US, the involvement of several different law enforcement agencies can seriously hinder the detection and capture of offenders. If such was the case in Victorian London, did Jack use it to his advantage or was he just lucky? Or are we making way too much of the whole Met. v. City angle?
Best wishes,
Steve.
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